This presentation shares examples from around the globe of how citizens are digitally engaged. This engage can range from learning about the plans of their city to being an important part of plan creation.
In 2008, 228 cases of dengue fever were reported in Calasiao, Pangasinan, Philippines, the highest number since 1998. The local government declared a dengue fever outbreak in August 2008 and implemented response activities including education campaigns, larviciding, and fogging. These efforts aimed to prevent further spread of the disease despite challenges from floods and other health issues. The outbreak declaration was lifted in November once case numbers decreased below epidemic thresholds.
Diplo E-Participation Day, Citizen Engagement a question of design, Giulio, Q...DiploFoundation
This document discusses citizen engagement and how to design engagement initiatives. It provides examples of how citizens can contribute through skills like hacking, local knowledge, experience using public services, geographic coverage, trust, and collaborative work. Citizens represent a non-contractible workforce as their skills and contributions are hard to define. Effective engagement design views citizens as experts, sensors, and makers rather than just targets. The document emphasizes that governments need to improve internal processes and culture first before meaningfully engaging citizens.
Dr Julia Glidden Bahrain International eGovernment Forum 201221cConsultancy_2012
The document discusses the concept of smart cities and how they are enabled by the Internet of Things (IoT) and open data. A smart city places citizens at the center of connected services across various sectors like tourism, transportation, and urban design. It connects important areas like buildings, utilities, cities, electric vehicles, community generation, smart meters, and smart grids. The presentation concludes by highlighting Bahrain's contribution to developing smart city initiatives.
City and Regional Planners are increasingly using mobile apps as part of their effort to engage with the public. Learn about a number of apps that allow both the public and planners to contribute to their community.
Mapping Zombies provides guidance for analyzing digital data pre-apocalypse to map potential zombie outbreaks and aid survival post-apocalypse. It suggests using social media and other online data sources to identify population patterns and trends that could influence zombie infections or help locate supplies after a zombie outbreak transforms society.
The document discusses using social media and technology to improve communications and administration for a university planning program. It identifies the challenge of managing information flow between different levels of the university including the main campus, a satellite campus, faculty, students, alumni and external parties. The goal is to develop an ideal solution using analytics to create a centralized "third place" for the program that helps all relevant groups stay informed and connected.
In 2008, 228 cases of dengue fever were reported in Calasiao, Pangasinan, Philippines, the highest number since 1998. The local government declared a dengue fever outbreak in August 2008 and implemented response activities including education campaigns, larviciding, and fogging. These efforts aimed to prevent further spread of the disease despite challenges from floods and other health issues. The outbreak declaration was lifted in November once case numbers decreased below epidemic thresholds.
Diplo E-Participation Day, Citizen Engagement a question of design, Giulio, Q...DiploFoundation
This document discusses citizen engagement and how to design engagement initiatives. It provides examples of how citizens can contribute through skills like hacking, local knowledge, experience using public services, geographic coverage, trust, and collaborative work. Citizens represent a non-contractible workforce as their skills and contributions are hard to define. Effective engagement design views citizens as experts, sensors, and makers rather than just targets. The document emphasizes that governments need to improve internal processes and culture first before meaningfully engaging citizens.
Dr Julia Glidden Bahrain International eGovernment Forum 201221cConsultancy_2012
The document discusses the concept of smart cities and how they are enabled by the Internet of Things (IoT) and open data. A smart city places citizens at the center of connected services across various sectors like tourism, transportation, and urban design. It connects important areas like buildings, utilities, cities, electric vehicles, community generation, smart meters, and smart grids. The presentation concludes by highlighting Bahrain's contribution to developing smart city initiatives.
City and Regional Planners are increasingly using mobile apps as part of their effort to engage with the public. Learn about a number of apps that allow both the public and planners to contribute to their community.
Mapping Zombies provides guidance for analyzing digital data pre-apocalypse to map potential zombie outbreaks and aid survival post-apocalypse. It suggests using social media and other online data sources to identify population patterns and trends that could influence zombie infections or help locate supplies after a zombie outbreak transforms society.
The document discusses using social media and technology to improve communications and administration for a university planning program. It identifies the challenge of managing information flow between different levels of the university including the main campus, a satellite campus, faculty, students, alumni and external parties. The goal is to develop an ideal solution using analytics to create a centralized "third place" for the program that helps all relevant groups stay informed and connected.
StreetSeen: Factors Influencing the Desirability of a Street for BicyclingJennifer Evans-Cowley
In what is one of the first visual preference surveys using Google Street View through a free tool StreetSeen (http://streetseen.osu.edu), adult students viewed a series of paired slides of image of city streets. Participants were asked to choose which image from the pair they preferred based on which street they would prefer to ride a bicycle. Subsequent analyses showed that differences in continent of the respondent impact preferences. This research demonstrates the extent to which certain segment-level factors such as presence of trees along the street, width of the street, presence of sidewalks, and other features are preferred using discrete choice models. The models reveal that increasing vehicle traffic, number of lanes, streetscapes with dense trees, and presence of parking lots decrease the probability of being chosen. Having sidewalks, presence of pedestrians, trees set back from the street, and traffic calming devices are positively associated with respondents’ preferences. The results related to trees may relate to perceptions of safety. For example, dense trees close to a street may limit visibility along a roadway. The models also reveal significant differences in preferences based on respondents’ locations. We conclude that this method is effective in capturing information about bicycling preferences. The survey methodology and analysis techniques introduced in this study can help city planners design streets that are preferred by bicyclists.
Are City Planning Programs With It? The Good, The Bad, and The BoringJennifer Evans-Cowley
This presentation examines the use of social media by city planning schools in the United States. It identifys key ways that planning schools are using social media and opportunities for improving and coordinating social media efforts.
This document provides a reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP financial metrics for a company's net income and earnings per share for 2004. It shows the company's gross sales, gross profit, operating expenses, operating income, net income, and diluted EPS for each quarter of 2004 and the full year under both GAAP and non-GAAP measures, with reconciling items that adjust between the two methods.
This document is Prudential Financial's quarterly financial supplement for Q3 2002. It provides financial highlights and key metrics for Prudential and its business divisions. Some notable numbers include:
- Total pre-tax adjusted operating income for Financial Services Businesses of $427 million for Q3 2002.
- Net income of $392 million for Financial Services Businesses for Q3 2002.
- Total assets under management and administration of $532.9 billion as of the end of Q3 2002.
- Common stock price of $28.56 per share at the end of Q3 2002.
1) The document discusses formative assessment and feedback in distance learning environments. It explores how assessment practices and views of tutors differ across three open and distance learning institutions.
2) Several dimensions of effective formative assessment are identified, including power, dialogue, peer/self assessment, feedback attributes, visibility, and reflection. A range of technologies that can support formative and non-formative assessment are also discussed.
3) While many tutors engage in formative assessment, the concept of formative assessment varied and was sometimes equated with continuous assessment. Formats of assessment have changed with new learning technologies. Closing the feedback loop is often problematic in courses that emphasize end-of-year summative assessments.
Active lifestyle cameras, such as Drift and GoPro, enable planners and other professionals to capture activity of pedestrians, bicyclists, and motorists. This information can be analyzed to understand patterns of behavior that can support infrastructure investment and policy change.
The document discusses stakeholder input on social media outreach for the American Psychological Association (APA). It provides data showing professionals prefer LinkedIn for engagement and students want fun engagement. It analyzes APA's current social media presence and success on LinkedIn, Facebook, Google+, YouTube, and Flickr. Recommendations include adding Slideshare, engaging students through university tweets and contests, targeting young professionals, and using tools like Wikipedia, Pinterest, Flickr, Yelp, Foursquare and Twitter to engage people in the Great Places of America program.
StreetSeen http://streetseen.osu.edu provides users with a tool to understand visual preferences through pairwise surveys. This presentation demonstrates a study of pedestrian preferences for intersections.
This document discusses engaging citizens to help build a Future City through their participation in various roles such as data generators, test bed participants, collaborators, and co-designers. It suggests citizens could help with projects using technology to encourage sustainability, supporting creativity and enterprise, and encouraging social change through creative arts practice. The document also mentions a city dashboard, understanding solar energy generation, and engaging 500 citizens to test a new EU platform called "The Super Prosumer".
GlobalGiving crowdsources funding for nonprofits by allowing individuals to donate to specific projects and see results. It uses community input and social media to evaluate over 2500 nonprofit projects and organizations. GlobalGiving aims to build an online reputation system for nonprofits based on monitoring, evaluations, and feedback from visitors, the community, and filtered social media.
GlobalGiving crowdsources funding for nonprofits by allowing individuals to donate to specific projects and see results. It uses community input and social media to evaluate over 2500 nonprofit projects and organizations. GlobalGiving aims to build an online reputation system for nonprofits based on monitoring, evaluations, and feedback from the community.
Government Citizen Engagement Survival GuideGovLoop
Presented by GovLoop & RightNow Technologies this is the GovLoop Training - Citizen Engagement Survival Guide - 5 Ways to Use Social Media to Engage Citizens
Presentation "e-Democracy: Connecting European Youth and Politics Through Digital Tools" for JEF Europe seminar in Edinburgh, Scotland on February 3rd, 2017.
Automating feedback - the answer for small Civic Tech teams? - Luke Bacon (Op...mysociety
This was presented by Luke Bacon from the OpenAustralia Foundation at the Impacts of Civic Technology Conference (TICTeC 2017) in Florence on 26th April. You can find out more information about the conference here: http://tictec.mysociety.org
Janta Choupal is a social media app for citizens, leaders, and administrators in Maharashtra to connect locally and address civic issues. A survey of 15,000 households found that 60% don't know their neighbors, 70% use smartphones but are not connected to elected representatives, and 99.99% had social or civic issues but no transparency in the resolution process. The app aims to fill the gap of local social media by allowing citizens to report issues, elected officials to address them, and track progress through citizen journalism. It has started gaining traction and impact but future plans include premium services, hyperlocal advertising, and data analytics to generate revenue.
This document discusses challenging people's "opinion comfort zones" regarding helping those in need locally versus helping internationally. It proposes using the same myths people believe about international aid and applying them to domestic systems to show that neither option is clearly more effective. The goal is to spark discussion and open people's minds by dissolving common arguments against international aid. Tactics include Facebook/YouTube ads and a website sharing evidence that aid makes a real difference globally and locally through live video broadcasts.
It is not enough to talk about user experience. You've got to start reframing the whole conversation about mobility to get people to talk about themselves as citizens, and not as users.
This presentation was given at UXMK on 16th January 2020
Building a Sustainable Citizen-Centric Smart City ApproachDr. Mazlan Abbas
This document discusses building smart cities using a citizen-centric approach. It proposes using crowdsensing to identify issues reported by citizens through their preferred messaging channels. The reports would be analyzed to identify locations of problems and assign them to the proper authorities. Insights from big data analytics would help inform decision making. Benefits include increased accuracy in identifying issues and locations, better prioritization of problems, and cost reductions. Tips are provided to avoid pitfalls like ensuring buy-in from citizens and authorities, using gamification and social media channels citizens prefer, and developing citizen engagement strategies. Outsourcing app development expertise is recommended rather than cities trying to build these capabilities internally.
Social Media Presentation for The Center for Organizational EffectivenessGovLoop
Here are some examples of specific, measurable outcomes with clear definitions of achievement:
- Drive 100 people to register for our emergency preparedness workshop by promoting it on social media. Achieved when 100 unique visitors click through from our Facebook page to the registration form.
- Generate 50 volunteer signups to help with our annual park cleanup event. Achieved when 50 people complete the online volunteer form and select the park cleanup from the options.
- Receive feedback from 200 residents on our draft budget through an online survey promoted on Twitter. Achieved when 200 surveys are submitted with at least one question answered.
Does this help explain what outcomes should look like in a plan? Let me know if you need any clarification or have additional
Putting up our learning as volunteer for nearly 6 months , for a political party , for a Assembly Constituency in recently held Karnataka State election ,,, into a product.
The document proposes a mobile app called We The People (WTP) to address low voter turnout by modernizing democracy. WTP would be a database on politicians and candidates with bios and stances. It would allow users to take surveys for free and see results. Survey responses would integrate with social media to trend topics and gain audience. An MVP will test the market by asking local voters if they want to take surveys and have their voice heard. Politicians and groups would subscribe for survey data and ability to create their own surveys. The app aims to give users a voice and make money through subscriptions. It calls on users to join the beta and spread the word to take back democracy.
StreetSeen: Factors Influencing the Desirability of a Street for BicyclingJennifer Evans-Cowley
In what is one of the first visual preference surveys using Google Street View through a free tool StreetSeen (http://streetseen.osu.edu), adult students viewed a series of paired slides of image of city streets. Participants were asked to choose which image from the pair they preferred based on which street they would prefer to ride a bicycle. Subsequent analyses showed that differences in continent of the respondent impact preferences. This research demonstrates the extent to which certain segment-level factors such as presence of trees along the street, width of the street, presence of sidewalks, and other features are preferred using discrete choice models. The models reveal that increasing vehicle traffic, number of lanes, streetscapes with dense trees, and presence of parking lots decrease the probability of being chosen. Having sidewalks, presence of pedestrians, trees set back from the street, and traffic calming devices are positively associated with respondents’ preferences. The results related to trees may relate to perceptions of safety. For example, dense trees close to a street may limit visibility along a roadway. The models also reveal significant differences in preferences based on respondents’ locations. We conclude that this method is effective in capturing information about bicycling preferences. The survey methodology and analysis techniques introduced in this study can help city planners design streets that are preferred by bicyclists.
Are City Planning Programs With It? The Good, The Bad, and The BoringJennifer Evans-Cowley
This presentation examines the use of social media by city planning schools in the United States. It identifys key ways that planning schools are using social media and opportunities for improving and coordinating social media efforts.
This document provides a reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP financial metrics for a company's net income and earnings per share for 2004. It shows the company's gross sales, gross profit, operating expenses, operating income, net income, and diluted EPS for each quarter of 2004 and the full year under both GAAP and non-GAAP measures, with reconciling items that adjust between the two methods.
This document is Prudential Financial's quarterly financial supplement for Q3 2002. It provides financial highlights and key metrics for Prudential and its business divisions. Some notable numbers include:
- Total pre-tax adjusted operating income for Financial Services Businesses of $427 million for Q3 2002.
- Net income of $392 million for Financial Services Businesses for Q3 2002.
- Total assets under management and administration of $532.9 billion as of the end of Q3 2002.
- Common stock price of $28.56 per share at the end of Q3 2002.
1) The document discusses formative assessment and feedback in distance learning environments. It explores how assessment practices and views of tutors differ across three open and distance learning institutions.
2) Several dimensions of effective formative assessment are identified, including power, dialogue, peer/self assessment, feedback attributes, visibility, and reflection. A range of technologies that can support formative and non-formative assessment are also discussed.
3) While many tutors engage in formative assessment, the concept of formative assessment varied and was sometimes equated with continuous assessment. Formats of assessment have changed with new learning technologies. Closing the feedback loop is often problematic in courses that emphasize end-of-year summative assessments.
Active lifestyle cameras, such as Drift and GoPro, enable planners and other professionals to capture activity of pedestrians, bicyclists, and motorists. This information can be analyzed to understand patterns of behavior that can support infrastructure investment and policy change.
The document discusses stakeholder input on social media outreach for the American Psychological Association (APA). It provides data showing professionals prefer LinkedIn for engagement and students want fun engagement. It analyzes APA's current social media presence and success on LinkedIn, Facebook, Google+, YouTube, and Flickr. Recommendations include adding Slideshare, engaging students through university tweets and contests, targeting young professionals, and using tools like Wikipedia, Pinterest, Flickr, Yelp, Foursquare and Twitter to engage people in the Great Places of America program.
StreetSeen http://streetseen.osu.edu provides users with a tool to understand visual preferences through pairwise surveys. This presentation demonstrates a study of pedestrian preferences for intersections.
This document discusses engaging citizens to help build a Future City through their participation in various roles such as data generators, test bed participants, collaborators, and co-designers. It suggests citizens could help with projects using technology to encourage sustainability, supporting creativity and enterprise, and encouraging social change through creative arts practice. The document also mentions a city dashboard, understanding solar energy generation, and engaging 500 citizens to test a new EU platform called "The Super Prosumer".
GlobalGiving crowdsources funding for nonprofits by allowing individuals to donate to specific projects and see results. It uses community input and social media to evaluate over 2500 nonprofit projects and organizations. GlobalGiving aims to build an online reputation system for nonprofits based on monitoring, evaluations, and feedback from visitors, the community, and filtered social media.
GlobalGiving crowdsources funding for nonprofits by allowing individuals to donate to specific projects and see results. It uses community input and social media to evaluate over 2500 nonprofit projects and organizations. GlobalGiving aims to build an online reputation system for nonprofits based on monitoring, evaluations, and feedback from the community.
Government Citizen Engagement Survival GuideGovLoop
Presented by GovLoop & RightNow Technologies this is the GovLoop Training - Citizen Engagement Survival Guide - 5 Ways to Use Social Media to Engage Citizens
Presentation "e-Democracy: Connecting European Youth and Politics Through Digital Tools" for JEF Europe seminar in Edinburgh, Scotland on February 3rd, 2017.
Automating feedback - the answer for small Civic Tech teams? - Luke Bacon (Op...mysociety
This was presented by Luke Bacon from the OpenAustralia Foundation at the Impacts of Civic Technology Conference (TICTeC 2017) in Florence on 26th April. You can find out more information about the conference here: http://tictec.mysociety.org
Janta Choupal is a social media app for citizens, leaders, and administrators in Maharashtra to connect locally and address civic issues. A survey of 15,000 households found that 60% don't know their neighbors, 70% use smartphones but are not connected to elected representatives, and 99.99% had social or civic issues but no transparency in the resolution process. The app aims to fill the gap of local social media by allowing citizens to report issues, elected officials to address them, and track progress through citizen journalism. It has started gaining traction and impact but future plans include premium services, hyperlocal advertising, and data analytics to generate revenue.
This document discusses challenging people's "opinion comfort zones" regarding helping those in need locally versus helping internationally. It proposes using the same myths people believe about international aid and applying them to domestic systems to show that neither option is clearly more effective. The goal is to spark discussion and open people's minds by dissolving common arguments against international aid. Tactics include Facebook/YouTube ads and a website sharing evidence that aid makes a real difference globally and locally through live video broadcasts.
It is not enough to talk about user experience. You've got to start reframing the whole conversation about mobility to get people to talk about themselves as citizens, and not as users.
This presentation was given at UXMK on 16th January 2020
Building a Sustainable Citizen-Centric Smart City ApproachDr. Mazlan Abbas
This document discusses building smart cities using a citizen-centric approach. It proposes using crowdsensing to identify issues reported by citizens through their preferred messaging channels. The reports would be analyzed to identify locations of problems and assign them to the proper authorities. Insights from big data analytics would help inform decision making. Benefits include increased accuracy in identifying issues and locations, better prioritization of problems, and cost reductions. Tips are provided to avoid pitfalls like ensuring buy-in from citizens and authorities, using gamification and social media channels citizens prefer, and developing citizen engagement strategies. Outsourcing app development expertise is recommended rather than cities trying to build these capabilities internally.
Social Media Presentation for The Center for Organizational EffectivenessGovLoop
Here are some examples of specific, measurable outcomes with clear definitions of achievement:
- Drive 100 people to register for our emergency preparedness workshop by promoting it on social media. Achieved when 100 unique visitors click through from our Facebook page to the registration form.
- Generate 50 volunteer signups to help with our annual park cleanup event. Achieved when 50 people complete the online volunteer form and select the park cleanup from the options.
- Receive feedback from 200 residents on our draft budget through an online survey promoted on Twitter. Achieved when 200 surveys are submitted with at least one question answered.
Does this help explain what outcomes should look like in a plan? Let me know if you need any clarification or have additional
Putting up our learning as volunteer for nearly 6 months , for a political party , for a Assembly Constituency in recently held Karnataka State election ,,, into a product.
The document proposes a mobile app called We The People (WTP) to address low voter turnout by modernizing democracy. WTP would be a database on politicians and candidates with bios and stances. It would allow users to take surveys for free and see results. Survey responses would integrate with social media to trend topics and gain audience. An MVP will test the market by asking local voters if they want to take surveys and have their voice heard. Politicians and groups would subscribe for survey data and ability to create their own surveys. The app aims to give users a voice and make money through subscriptions. It calls on users to join the beta and spread the word to take back democracy.
This document contains an UX portfolio for Mochamad Zaenal Muzaqqi. It includes details about his hard and soft skills, work experience, and the design process for his ButuhDarah blood donation app. The portfolio documents the research conducted including user interviews and surveys. Empathy maps were created to understand user needs. Competitor analysis was performed. Brainstorming identified solutions to address problems like easily searching for and posting blood donation needs. User flows and wireframes were designed for the app. The goal is to make it simple for people to find blood donors through a mobile application.
Healthy City works with community-based organizations to apply Community Based Participatory Action Research (CBPAR) in their mapping and community-engagement work. CBPAR starts with issues and strategies to produce analysis, uses mapping technology as one tool for community engagement and focuses on communities within a geographic location, such as a neighborhood. Using CPBAR in mapping facilitates engagement, education, strategizing, and dialogue among community members--including youth--and decision-makers.
Including young people in map making allows them to contribute their unique knowledge and lived experiences as community residents. Youth can provide invaluable insight and can act as change agents advocating on behalf of their communities. Whether you are a Youth Organizer, Community Liaison or Direct Service Provider, there are a number of ways you can incorporate and share youth data and stories using a variety of free resources and tools available on HealthyCity.org to build community power.
In this webinar you will learn how to:
1) Research and map youth population data to enhance program focus and planning on healthycity.org
2) Upload your own data onto a map
3) Use Wikimaps to better plan, collaborate and share youth outreach strategies and stories
Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Bad UX Research But Were Afraid to...Valsplat
This document summarizes an Amsterdam meetup on March 16th, 2016 about user experience (UX) research presented by Miel de Zwart. The presentation discussed different types of UX research methods like user interviews, usability testing, and analytics. It highlighted both good practices for moderating interviews and observing users without influencing them, as well as common pitfalls to avoid. Miel also provided suggestions for how to shift from reactive UX research to more proactive research that drives design changes, such as conducting frequent user tests and integrating UX insights directly into development processes.
CyberSalon - Smart Citizens, Cities & the Case for CitySDKFrank Kresin
Smart cities should empower citizens by giving them access to data and systems. The CitySDK provides open APIs and standards to share data and solutions across cities. It has been used to build apps that give citizens information on mobility, parking, trees, and public services. By prototyping quickly and engaging citizens, cities can better address problems through civic initiatives and harness the knowledge of their smart citizens.
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
How to Add Chatter in the odoo 17 ERP ModuleCeline George
In Odoo, the chatter is like a chat tool that helps you work together on records. You can leave notes and track things, making it easier to talk with your team and partners. Inside chatter, all communication history, activity, and changes will be displayed.
This presentation includes basic of PCOS their pathology and treatment and also Ayurveda correlation of PCOS and Ayurvedic line of treatment mentioned in classics.
it describes the bony anatomy including the femoral head , acetabulum, labrum . also discusses the capsule , ligaments . muscle that act on the hip joint and the range of motion are outlined. factors affecting hip joint stability and weight transmission through the joint are summarized.
The simplified electron and muon model, Oscillating Spacetime: The Foundation...RitikBhardwaj56
Discover the Simplified Electron and Muon Model: A New Wave-Based Approach to Understanding Particles delves into a groundbreaking theory that presents electrons and muons as rotating soliton waves within oscillating spacetime. Geared towards students, researchers, and science buffs, this book breaks down complex ideas into simple explanations. It covers topics such as electron waves, temporal dynamics, and the implications of this model on particle physics. With clear illustrations and easy-to-follow explanations, readers will gain a new outlook on the universe's fundamental nature.
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty,
International FDP on Fundamentals of Research in Social Sciences
at Integral University, Lucknow, 06.06.2024
By Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
हिंदी वर्णमाला पीपीटी, hindi alphabet PPT presentation, hindi varnamala PPT, Hindi Varnamala pdf, हिंदी स्वर, हिंदी व्यंजन, sikhiye hindi varnmala, dr. mulla adam ali, hindi language and literature, hindi alphabet with drawing, hindi alphabet pdf, hindi varnamala for childrens, hindi language, hindi varnamala practice for kids, https://www.drmullaadamali.com
Executive Directors Chat Leveraging AI for Diversity, Equity, and InclusionTechSoup
Let’s explore the intersection of technology and equity in the final session of our DEI series. Discover how AI tools, like ChatGPT, can be used to support and enhance your nonprofit's DEI initiatives. Participants will gain insights into practical AI applications and get tips for leveraging technology to advance their DEI goals.
Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
How to Manage Your Lost Opportunities in Odoo 17 CRMCeline George
Odoo 17 CRM allows us to track why we lose sales opportunities with "Lost Reasons." This helps analyze our sales process and identify areas for improvement. Here's how to configure lost reasons in Odoo 17 CRM
9. New York City
• http://www.nytimes.com/newsgraphics/2013
/08/18/reshaping-new-york/
10. Consult: We will keep you
informed, listen to and
acknowledge concerns and
aspirations, and provide
feedback on how public
input influenced the
decision
15. Image Preferences
Images scored based on the fraction of times
that they were selected over other images,
correcting by the “win” and “loss” ratios of all
images with which they were compared.
16. Involve: We will work with
you to ensure your
concerns and aspirations
are directly reflected in the
alternatives developed and
provide feedback on how
public input influenced the
decision.
26. Content Analysis
Microblogger: Seriously the bus system in Austin needs major work.
SNAPP: @Katshead42 What about Austin's bus system isn't working for you
now? How could it be made better? #snappatx
Microblogger: @SNAPPatx my bus was 15 minutes early so i had to wait at the
stop for an hour for the next one to come. They drive by stops all the time
SNAPP: @Katshead42 It sounds like more frequent buses might help ease the
pain if u miss a bus that's running early, yes? Anything else? #snappatx
Microblogger: @SNAPPatx that would help. If the buses ran later into the night
or early morning that would help too.
SNAPP: @Katshead42 Excellent. Voicing your opinion about
problems/solutions is the best way to make change happen. We hear you!
#snappatx
Source: Andy Schultz
27. Collaborate: We will look to
you for advice and
innovation in formulating
solutions and incorporate
your advice and
recommendations into the
decisions to the maximum
extent possible.
Boston: I’m sure we have all had a bad pothole experience that led to your drink to slosh, your car to be knocked out of alignment, or a bicycle tire to poop. The City of Boston created an Office of New Urban Mechanics that is charged with solving city problems through technology. The City released a free app that detects potholes called Street Bump. The goal of Street Bump is to allow residents to improve their neighborhood streets. As the person drives, the mobile app collects data about the smoothness of the ride. The City uses this real-time information to fix potholes and to plan for capital improvements. The app uses the phone’s accelerometer and its GPS. Likely potholes are reported via the city’s Open311 system so that they will be investigated and fixed. The City patches 19,000 potholes per year. The City hope that this will help prevent massive potholes and save public works crews time. The creators of Street Bump are planning to role this out in Austin, London, and New York as well.
Researchers and students at the University of Nairobi, the Center for Sustainable Urban Development atColumbia University, and the Civic Data Design lab at MIT produced the map –and underlying databehind it—by carrying their cell phones and GPS devices along every route in the network. The informalstation list was created by using cell phone and GPS data. Until now the “official” stops had never beenlisted or mapped out. For the first time ever “Matatu” can be visualized.
ParkCirca: Now finding an open parking space is great in congested places, but what if you could rent a parking space? Two residents of San Francisco talked about how irritating it is to endlessly circle the block waiting for a public parking space when they saw lots of empty driveways they weren’t allowed to park in. They then thought what if they could just knock on the door and ask to park in someones driveway for $20 for a few hours. From this idea they built an app. The ParkCirca app allows people who own a parking space to be able to rent it when it is unused. A parking space owner can list times that the space is available. The parkers then search for available spaces and then simply “check in” via the ParkCirca app. The check in process starts a time and when they return to their car and “check out” of the space money is then transferred to the parking space owner. This app is being used in San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, Cleveland, Tornonto and a number of other cities.Perhaps you are thinking that parking isn’t such a big issue in your community. Being a professor I see all the time people standing outside offering the ability to park for a football game for $20. Wouldn’t it be better if I could just rent my parking space in my driveway without having to stand outside for example.
Researchers and students at the University of Nairobi, the Center for Sustainable Urban Development atColumbia University, and the Civic Data Design lab at MIT produced the map –and underlying databehind it—by carrying their cell phones and GPS devices along every route in the network. The informalstation list was created by using cell phone and GPS data. Until now the “official” stops had never beenlisted or mapped out. For the first time ever “Matatu” can be visualized.
ParkCirca: Now finding an open parking space is great in congested places, but what if you could rent a parking space? Two residents of San Francisco talked about how irritating it is to endlessly circle the block waiting for a public parking space when they saw lots of empty driveways they weren’t allowed to park in. They then thought what if they could just knock on the door and ask to park in someones driveway for $20 for a few hours. From this idea they built an app. The ParkCirca app allows people who own a parking space to be able to rent it when it is unused. A parking space owner can list times that the space is available. The parkers then search for available spaces and then simply “check in” via the ParkCirca app. The check in process starts a time and when they return to their car and “check out” of the space money is then transferred to the parking space owner. This app is being used in San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, Cleveland, Tornonto and a number of other cities.Perhaps you are thinking that parking isn’t such a big issue in your community. Being a professor I see all the time people standing outside offering the ability to park for a football game for $20. Wouldn’t it be better if I could just rent my parking space in my driveway without having to stand outside for example.
Assesses emotional, cognitive, and structural components of text using a psychometrically validated internal dictionary.
LIWC calculates the degree to which a text sample contains words belonging to empirically defined psychological and structural categories. It calculates the relative frequency with which words related to the psychological dimension occur.
Assesses emotional, cognitive, and structural components of text using a psychometrically validated internal dictionary.
LIWC calculates the degree to which a text sample contains words belonging to empirically defined psychological and structural categories. It calculates the relative frequency with which words related to the psychological dimension occur.
Assesses emotional, cognitive, and structural components of text using a psychometrically validated internal dictionary.
LIWC calculates the degree to which a text sample contains words belonging to empirically defined psychological and structural categories. It calculates the relative frequency with which words related to the psychological dimension occur.
Researchers and students at the University of Nairobi, the Center for Sustainable Urban Development atColumbia University, and the Civic Data Design lab at MIT produced the map –and underlying databehind it—by carrying their cell phones and GPS devices along every route in the network. The informalstation list was created by using cell phone and GPS data. Until now the “official” stops had never beenlisted or mapped out. For the first time ever “Matatu” can be visualized.
ParkCirca: Now finding an open parking space is great in congested places, but what if you could rent a parking space? Two residents of San Francisco talked about how irritating it is to endlessly circle the block waiting for a public parking space when they saw lots of empty driveways they weren’t allowed to park in. They then thought what if they could just knock on the door and ask to park in someones driveway for $20 for a few hours. From this idea they built an app. The ParkCirca app allows people who own a parking space to be able to rent it when it is unused. A parking space owner can list times that the space is available. The parkers then search for available spaces and then simply “check in” via the ParkCirca app. The check in process starts a time and when they return to their car and “check out” of the space money is then transferred to the parking space owner. This app is being used in San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, Cleveland, Tornonto and a number of other cities.Perhaps you are thinking that parking isn’t such a big issue in your community. Being a professor I see all the time people standing outside offering the ability to park for a football game for $20. Wouldn’t it be better if I could just rent my parking space in my driveway without having to stand outside for example.
Researchers and students at the University of Nairobi, the Center for Sustainable Urban Development atColumbia University, and the Civic Data Design lab at MIT produced the map –and underlying databehind it—by carrying their cell phones and GPS devices along every route in the network. The informalstation list was created by using cell phone and GPS data. Until now the “official” stops had never beenlisted or mapped out. For the first time ever “Matatu” can be visualized.
ParkCirca: Now finding an open parking space is great in congested places, but what if you could rent a parking space? Two residents of San Francisco talked about how irritating it is to endlessly circle the block waiting for a public parking space when they saw lots of empty driveways they weren’t allowed to park in. They then thought what if they could just knock on the door and ask to park in someones driveway for $20 for a few hours. From this idea they built an app. The ParkCirca app allows people who own a parking space to be able to rent it when it is unused. A parking space owner can list times that the space is available. The parkers then search for available spaces and then simply “check in” via the ParkCirca app. The check in process starts a time and when they return to their car and “check out” of the space money is then transferred to the parking space owner. This app is being used in San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, Cleveland, Tornonto and a number of other cities.Perhaps you are thinking that parking isn’t such a big issue in your community. Being a professor I see all the time people standing outside offering the ability to park for a football game for $20. Wouldn’t it be better if I could just rent my parking space in my driveway without having to stand outside for example.
With an estimated 130 unregulated matatu lines in metro Nairobi, a transit system has emerged in theabsence of a formal public transit and people have created it by themselves. For the first time thesystem has been fully mapped.
Shareabouts: The Folks at open plans are turning their ideas for public engagement into mobile apps. For example, a current project is Shareabouts an app that allows users to suggest a location, add a comments and support others suggestions. An app like this would allow the public to interact in a planning process sharing their own ideas about what they’d like to see in their neighborhood, park or city. I’m sure you can imagine other apps that you could use in your own work.
Boston: I’m sure we have all had a bad pothole experience that led to your drink to slosh, your car to be knocked out of alignment, or a bicycle tire to poop. The City of Boston created an Office of New Urban Mechanics that is charged with solving city problems through technology. The City released a free app that detects potholes called Street Bump. The goal of Street Bump is to allow residents to improve their neighborhood streets. As the person drives, the mobile app collects data about the smoothness of the ride. The City uses this real-time information to fix potholes and to plan for capital improvements. The app uses the phone’s accelerometer and its GPS. Likely potholes are reported via the city’s Open311 system so that they will be investigated and fixed. The City patches 19,000 potholes per year. The City hope that this will help prevent massive potholes and save public works crews time. The creators of Street Bump are planning to role this out in Austin, London, and New York as well.
Pittsburgh: Cities across the country have begun to provide real-time parking availability information. For example, the Park PGH app provides real-time parking availability for Pittsburgh’s Cultural District. This allows users to see which garages have spaces, where the closest parking is to the user’s destination and the cost of the parking
Toronto: Other apps such as Hit the Pothole use crowdsource potholes. All the jolts experienced are recorded and the data then instantly shows up on the map. The Pothole Radar allows the user to be warned of immanent danger both with an audio and vibration alert. For those who like to listen to music while riding, the alerts mix into the current music that is playing. The popularity of this app has grown and now users in other communities can use this as well.
Shareabouts: The Folks at open plans are turning their ideas for public engagement into mobile apps. For example, a current project is Shareabouts an app that allows users to suggest a location, add a comments and support others suggestions. An app like this would allow the public to interact in a planning process sharing their own ideas about what they’d like to see in their neighborhood, park or city. I’m sure you can imagine other apps that you could use in your own work.
ParkCirca: Now finding an open parking space is great in congested places, but what if you could rent a parking space? Two residents of San Francisco talked about how irritating it is to endlessly circle the block waiting for a public parking space when they saw lots of empty driveways they weren’t allowed to park in. They then thought what if they could just knock on the door and ask to park in someones driveway for $20 for a few hours. From this idea they built an app. The ParkCirca app allows people who own a parking space to be able to rent it when it is unused. A parking space owner can list times that the space is available. The parkers then search for available spaces and then simply “check in” via the ParkCirca app. The check in process starts a time and when they return to their car and “check out” of the space money is then transferred to the parking space owner. This app is being used in San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, Cleveland, Tornonto and a number of other cities.Perhaps you are thinking that parking isn’t such a big issue in your community. Being a professor I see all the time people standing outside offering the ability to park for a football game for $20. Wouldn’t it be better if I could just rent my parking space in my driveway without having to stand outside for example.
Pittsburgh: Cities across the country have begun to provide real-time parking availability information. For example, the Park PGH app provides real-time parking availability for Pittsburgh’s Cultural District. This allows users to see which garages have spaces, where the closest parking is to the user’s destination and the cost of the parking
The State of Oregon is also using a mobile app to collect data about people on bikes. Instead of just using traditional bike counters they are also using the cell phone app, STRAVA. The biggest difference between just using traditional bike counters and STRAVA is that STRAVA allows you to see a complete trip. The app allows you to see where people are traveling and any possible trouble points they might have
The app really lets you differentiate between intersections and diagnose problem points. For example, if you see riders consistently using the east side of an intersection but not the west you may be able to pinpoint an infrastructure improvement. The app is very useful to inform engineers who may not bike in the area what improvements can be made.
In Portland, the city uses the app to look for patterns of shortcuts. In one instance the city was planning and designing a path on a two way street but noticed several people on bikes were using a church parking lot. Instead of building a path on the two way street; the city worked with the church to make the parking lot safer for everyone.
Using STRAVA helped the transportation planners make better informed decisions. One example thatcame from the STRAVA data was the decision not to put in rumble strips on a rural highway becausepeople were commuting on bikes on the road and it would have disrupted the travel for cyclists.(rumble strips were going to be placed over the entire lane, not just shoulder rumble strips)
ParkCirca: Now finding an open parking space is great in congested places, but what if you could rent a parking space? Two residents of San Francisco talked about how irritating it is to endlessly circle the block waiting for a public parking space when they saw lots of empty driveways they weren’t allowed to park in. They then thought what if they could just knock on the door and ask to park in someones driveway for $20 for a few hours. From this idea they built an app. The ParkCirca app allows people who own a parking space to be able to rent it when it is unused. A parking space owner can list times that the space is available. The parkers then search for available spaces and then simply “check in” via the ParkCirca app. The check in process starts a time and when they return to their car and “check out” of the space money is then transferred to the parking space owner. This app is being used in San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, Cleveland, Tornonto and a number of other cities.Perhaps you are thinking that parking isn’t such a big issue in your community. Being a professor I see all the time people standing outside offering the ability to park for a football game for $20. Wouldn’t it be better if I could just rent my parking space in my driveway without having to stand outside for example.
Pittsburgh: Cities across the country have begun to provide real-time parking availability information. For example, the Park PGH app provides real-time parking availability for Pittsburgh’s Cultural District. This allows users to see which garages have spaces, where the closest parking is to the user’s destination and the cost of the parking